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- 1380
- CANTERBURY TALES
- THE MONK'S PROLOGUE
- by Geoffrey Chaucer
-
- The Merry Words of the Host to the Monk
-
- When ended was my tale of Melibee
- And of Prudence and her benignity,
- Our host remarked: "As I am faithful man,
- And by the precious corpus Madrian,
- I'd rather than a barrel of good ale
- That my wife Goodlief could have heard this tale!
- For she has no such patience, I'll avow,
- As had this Melibeus' Prudence, now.
- By God's own bones! When I do beat my knaves
- She fetches forth the stoutest gnarly staves
- And cries out: 'Slay the damned dogs, every one!
- And break their bones, backbone and every bone!'
- And if but any neighbour, aye, of mine
- Will not, in church, bow to her and incline,
- Or happens to usurp her cherished place,
- Why, she comes home and ramps right in my face,
- Crying, 'False coward, go avenge your wife!
- By corpus bones! Come, let me have your knife,
- And you shall take my distaff and go spin!'
- From day to day like this will she begin:
- 'Alas!' she cries, 'that ever fate should shape
- My marriage with a milksop coward ape
- That may be overborne by every wight!
- You dare not stand up for your own wife's right!'
- This is my life, unless I choose to fight;
- And through the door anon I must take flight,
- Or else I'm lost, unless, indeed, that I
- Be like a young wild lion, foolhardy.
- I know well she will make me kill, one day,
- Some neighbour man and have to run away.
- For I am dangerous with a knife in hand,
- Albeit that I dare not her withstand;
- For she's big of arm, and wickedly inclined,
- As anyone who crosses her will find.
- But let us leave that doleful subject here.
- "My lord the monk," said he, "be of good cheer
- For you shall tell a tale, and verily.
- Lo, Rochester is standing there hard by!
- Ride up, my own liege lord, break not our game,
- But, by my truth, I do not know your name,
- Whether I ought to call you lord Don John,
- Or Don Thomas, or else Don Albion?
- Of what house are you, by your father's kin?
- I vow to God you have a right fair skin;
- It is a noble pasture where you're most;
- You are not like a penitent or ghost.
- Upon my faith, you are some officer,
- Some worthy sexton, or a cellarer,
- For by my father's soul, I guess, in sum,
- You are a master when you are at home.
- No cloisterer or novice can you be:
- A wily governor you seem to me,
- And therewithal a man of brawn and bone.
- A person of some consequence you've grown.
- I pray that God confound the silly fool
- That put you first in a religious school;
- You would have been a hen-hopper, all right!
- Had you as good a chance as you have might
- To work your lust in good engendering;
- Why, you'd beget full many a mighty thing.
- Alas! Why do you wear so wide a cope?
- God give me sorrow but, if I were pope,
- Not only you, but every mighty man,
- Though he were shorn full high upon the pan,
- Should have a wife. For all the world's forlorn!
- Religion, why it's gathered all the corn
- Of treading, and we laymen are but shrimps!
- From feeble trees there come but wretched imps.
- That's why our heirs are all so very slender
- And feeble that they may not well engender.
- That's why out goodwives always will essay
- Religious folk, for you may better pay
- With Venus' payments than we others do;
- God knows, in no light weight of coin pay you!
- But be not wroth, my lord, because I play;
- Full oft in jest have I heard truth, I say."
- This worthy monk took all with sober sense,
- And said: "I will do all my diligence,
- So far as it accords with decency,
- To tell to you a tale, or two, or three.
- And if you care to hear, come hitherward,
- And I'll repeat the life of Saint Edward;
- Or rather, first some tragedies I'll tell,
- Whereof I have a hundred in my cell.
- Tragedy is to say a certain story
- From ancient books which have preserved the glory
- Of one that stood in great prosperity
- And is now fallen out of high degree
- In misery, where he ends wretchedly.
- Such tales are versified most commonly
- In six feet, which men call hexameter.
- In prose are many written; some prefer
- A quantitative metre, sundry wise.
- Lo, this short prologue will enough suffice.
- "Now hearken, if you'd like my speech to hear;
- But first I do beseech, let it be clear
- That I, in order, tell not all these things,
- Be it of popes, of emperors, or kings,
- Each in his place, as men in writings find,
- But I put some before and some behind,
- As they to memory may come by chance;
- Hold me excused, pray, of my ignorance."
-
-
- Explicit
-
- THE MONK'S TALE
- by Geoffrey Chaucer
-
- De Casibus Virorum Illustrium
-
- I will bewail in manner of tragedy
- The ills of those that stood in high degree
- And fell so far there was no remedy
- To bring them out of their adversity;
- For certain 'tis, when Fortune wills to flee,
- There may no man the course of her withhold;
- Let no man trust in blind prosperity;
- Be warned by these examples true and old.
- LUCIFER
- LUCIFER
-
- With Lucifer, though he was angel fair
- And not a man, with him will I begin;
- For though Fortune may not an angel dare,
- From high degree yet fell he for his sin
- Down into Hell, and he lies yet therein.
- O Lucifer, brightest of angels all,
- Now art thou Satan, and thou may'st not win
- From misery wherein thou far did'st fall!
- ADAM
- ADAM
-
- Lo, Adam, in the garden Damascene,
- By God Almighty's finger wrought was he,
- And not begotten of man's sperm unclean;
- He ruled all Paradise, except one tree.
- Had never earthly man so high degree
- As Adam, till he, for misgovernance,
- Was driven from his high prosperity
- To labour, and to Hell, and to mischance.
- SAMSON
- SAMSON
-
- Lo, Samson, whose birth was annunciated
- By angel, long ere his nativity,
- And was to God Almighty consecrated,
- And had nobility while he could see.
- Was never such another as was he
- For body's strength, and therewith hardiness;
- But to his wives he told his privity,
- Whereby he slew himself for wretchedness.
-
- Samson, this noble mighty champion,
- Without a weapon in his hands, I say,
- He slew and rent in two a young lion,
- While to his wedding walking in the way.
- His false wife could so please him, she did pray
- Till she his secret held, when she, untrue,
- Unto his foes that secret did betray
- And him forsook for other loves and new.
-
- Three hundred foxes Samson took, for ire,
- And bound their brushes well together, and
- Then set those foxes' tails alight with fire,
- For he to every one had fixed a brand;
- And they burned all the corn of all that land
- And all the olive trees and vines, each one.
- A thousand men he slew with his own hand,
- With no weapon save an ass's jaw-bone.
-
- When they were slain, he thirsted so that he
- Was well nigh lost, for which he prayed, say I,
- That God would on his pain have some pity
- And send him drink, or must he surely die;
- And from that ass's jaw-bone, then but dry,
- Out of a tooth there sprang anon a well,
- Whereof he drank his fill and laid it by.
- Thus helped him God, as Judges, fifteen, tell.
-
- By very force at Gaza, on a night,
- Maugre Philistines of that said city,
- The great gates of the town he took with might,
- And on his shoulders carried them, did he,
- High on a hill where every man might see.
- O noble mighty Samson, lief and dear,
- Had'st thou not woman told thy privity,
- In all this world had never been thy pear.
-
- This Samson never liquor drank, nor wine.
- Nor on his head came razor, nor a shear,
- Obeying thus the angel's word divine,
- For all his forces in his long locks were;
- And fully twenty winters, year by year,
- He held of Israel the governance.
- But all too soon should he weep many a tear,
- For women should betray him to mischance!
-
- Delilah being his darling, her he told
- That in his unshorn locks all his strength lay,
- And him to foemen then she falsely sold.
- For, sleeping in her bosom, on a day,
- She clipped and sheared all his long hair away,
- Then showed his state unto his enemies,
- And when they found him lying in this array
- They bound him fast and put out both his eyes.
-
- Before his hair was sheared and shaven close,
- There were no bonds wherewith men might him bind;
- But now he lies in prison cell, morose,
- And labours, when at mill they make him grind.
- O noble Samson, strongest of mankind,
- O judge, but late, in glory measureless,
- Now may'st thou shed hot tears from thine eyes blind,
- For thou from wealth art fallen to wretchedness.
-
- This captive's end was as I now shall say;
- His foes they made a feast upon a day,
- And made him as their fool before them play,
- All in a temple great, of rich array.
- But at the last he made a stern affray;
- For he two pillars took and caused them fall,
- And down came roof and all, and there it lay,
- Killing himself and enemies, each and all.
-
- That is to say, those princes, every one,
- And full three thousand others who were slain
- By falling of that temple built of stone.
- To Samson now I'll not revert again.
- Be warned by this example old and plain.
- Men should not tell their business to their wives
- In such things as of secrecy they're fain,
- And if it touch their limbs or touch their lives.
- HERCULES
- HERCULES
-
- Of Hercules, the sovereign conquering power,
- Sing his deeds' praise and sing his high renown;
- For in his time of strength he was the flower.
- He slew, and made a lion's skin his own;
- Of centaurs laid he all the boastings down;
- He killed the cruel Harpies, those birds fell;
- Brought golden apples from the dragon thrown;
- And he stole Cerberus, the hound of Hell.
-
- He slew the cruel tyrant Busiris
- And made his horses eat him, flesh and bone;
- To a fiery, venomous worm he wrote finis;
- Achelous had two horns, but he broke one;
- Cacus he slew within his cave of stone;
- He slew the giant Anthaeus the strong;
- He killed the Erymanthian boar anon;
- And bore the heavens upon his shoulders long.
-
- Was never man, since this old world began,
- That slew so many monsters as did he.
- Throughout all earth's wide realms his honour ran,
- What of his strength and his high chivalry,
- And every kingdom went he out to see.
- He was so strong no man could hinder him;
- At both ends of the world, as says Trophy,
- In lieu of limits he set pillars grim.
-
- A darling had this noble champion,
- Deianira, sweet as is the May;
- And as these ancient writers say, each one,
- She sent to him a new shirt, fresh and gay.
- Alas that shirt, alas and welaway!
- Envenomed was so cunningly withal
- That, ere he'd worn the thing but half a day,
- It made the flesh from off his bones to fall.
-
- Yet are there writers who do her excuse
- Because of Nessus, who the shirt had made;
- Howe'er it be, I will not her accuse;
- But all his naked back this poison flayed
- Until the flesh turned black, and torn, and frayed.
- And when he saw no other remedy,
- Upon a pyre of hot brands he was laid,
- For of no poison would he deign to die.
-
- Thus died this mighty worthy, Hercules.
- Lo, who may trust to Fortune any throw?
- And he who seeks on earth for fame and case
- Ere he's aware, he's often brought down low.
- Right wise is he that can his own heart know.
- Beware, when Fortune may her smile disclose,
- She lies in wait her man to overthrow,
- And in such wise as he would least suppose.
- NEBUCHADNEZZAR
- NEBUCHADNEZZAR
-
- The precious treasure and the mighty throne,
- The glorious sceptre and royal majesty
- That Nebuchadnezzar counted as his own
- With tongue or pen not easily told may be.
- Twice of Jerusalem the victor he;
- The Temple's vessels took he and was glad.
- And Babylon was the ancient sovereign see
- Wherein his glory and delight he had.
-
- The fairest children of the blood royal
- Of Israel, he gelded them anon,
- And made each one of them to be his thrall.
- Among the number Daniel thus was one,
- Of all the youth the nation's wisest son;
- For he the dreams of the great king expounded
- When in Chaldea wise clerk was there none
- Who knew to what end those dreams were propounded.
-
- This proud king made a statue of pure gold
- Full sixty cubits long by seven wide,
- Unto which image both the young and old
- Commanded he to bow down, nor deride,
- Else in a furnace full of flames go bide
- And burn to ashes, who would not obey.
- But no assent to that, whate'er betide,
- Would Daniel and his pair of comrades say.
-
- This king of kings right proud was and elate,
- And thought that God, Who sits in majesty,
- Could not bereave him of his high estate:
- Yet suddenly he lost all dignity,
- And like a brute beast then he seemed to be,
- And ate hay like an ox, and lay without;
- In rain and storm with all wild beasts walked he,
- Until a certain time was come about.
-
- And like an eagle's fathers were his hairs,
- His nails like any bird's claws hooked were;
- Till God released him after certain years
- And gave him sense; and then, with many a tear,
- He gave God thanks; thereafter all in fear
- He lived of doing ever again trespass,
- And till the time they laid him on his bier,
- He knew that God was full of might and grace.
- BELSHAZZAR
- BELSHAZZAR
-
- His son, called Belshazzar, or Balthasar,
- Who held the realm after his father's day,
- He for his father's fate would not beware,
- For proud, he was of heart and of array;
- He was a worshipper of idols aye.
- His high estate assured him in his pride.
- But Fortune cast him down and there he lay,
- And suddenly his kingdom did divide.
-
- A feast he made unto a thousand lords,
- Upon a time, and bade them merry be.
- Then to his officers he said these words:
- "Go fetch me forth the vessels all," said he,
- "Of which my father, in prosperity,
- The temple in Jerusalem bereft,
- And unto our high gods give thanks that we
- Retain the honour that our elders left."
-
- His wife, his lords, and all his concubines,
- They drank then, while that mighty feast did last,
- Out of those noble vessels sundry wines.
- But on a wall this king his eyes did cast
- And saw an armless hand that wrote full fast,
- For fear whereof he shook with trouble sore.
- This hand that held Belshazzar so aghast
- Wrote Mene, mene, tekel, and no more.
-
- In all that land magician was there none
- Who could explain what thing this writing meant;
- But when they sent for Daniel it was done,
- Who said: "O king, God to your father lent
- Glory and honour, treasure, government,
- And he was proud, nor feared God, being mad,
- Wherefore Lord God great misery on him sent,
- And him bereft of all the realm he had.
-
- "He was cast out of human company;
- With asses was his habitation known;
- He ate hay like a beast, through wet and dry,
- Until he learned, by grace and reason shown,
- That Heaven's God has dominion, up and down,
- Over all realms and everything therein;
- And then did God to him compassion own
- And gave him back his kingdom and his kin.
-
- "Now you, who are his son, are proud also,
- Though you knew all these things, aye verily;
- You are a rebel and you are God's foe.
- You drank from out His vessels boastfully;
- Your wife and all your wenches sinfully
- Drank from those sacred vessels sundry wines,
- And praised false gods, and hailed them, wickedly;
- Whereof toward you the wrath of God inclines.
-
- "That hand was sent from God which on the wall
- Wrote Mene, mene, tekel. Oh, trust me,
- Your reign is done, you have no worth at all,
- Divided is your realm, and it shall be
- To Medes and Persians given now," said he.
- And that night went the king to fill death's maw,
- And so Darius took his high degree,
- Though he thereto had naught of right in law.
-
- Masters, therefrom a moral may you take,
- That in dominion is no certainness;
- For when Fortune will any man forsake,
- She takes his realm and all he may possess,
- And all his friends, too, both the great and less;
- For when a man has friends that Fortune gave,
- Mishap but turns them enemies, as I guess:
- This word is true for king as well as slave.
- ZENOBIA
- ZENOBIA
-
- Zenobia, of all Palmyra queen
- (As write old Persians of her nobleness),
- So mighty was in warfare, and so keen,
- That no man her surpassed in hardiness,
- Nor yet in lineage, nor in gentleness.
- Of blood of Persia's kings she was descended;
- I say not she had greatest beauteousness,
- But of her figure naught could be amended.
-
- From childhood on I find that she had fled
- Duties of women, and to wildwood went;
- And many a wild hart's blood therein she shed
- With arrows broad that she within them sent.
- So swift she was, she ran them down all spent;
- And when she was grown older she would kill
- Lions and leopards, and bears too she rent,
- And in her arms she broke them at her will.
-
- She even dared the wild beasts' dens to seek,
- And ran upon the mountains all the night,
- Sleeping beneath a bush; and, nothing weak,
- Wrestled by very force and very might
- With any man, however brave in fight;
- For there was nothing in her arms could stand.
- She kept her maidenhead from every wight,
- And unto no man would she yield her hand.
-
- But at the last her friends did make her marry
- Odenathus, a prince of that country,
- Albeit she long waited and did tarry;
- And you must understand that also he
- Held to the same queer fancies as had she.
- Nevertheless, when wedded, 'twould appear
- They lived in joy and all felicity,
- For each of them held other lief and dear.
-
- But to one thing she never would consent,
- For any prayers, that he should near her lie
- Save one night only, when 'twas her intent
- To have a child, since men should multiply;
- Yet when she learned she'd got no pregnancy
- From that night's work together on her bed,
- Then would she suffer him again to try,
- But only once indeed, and then with dread.
-
- And when she was with child, all at the last,
- Then no more might he play at that same game
- Till fully forty days were gone and past;
- Then would she once more suffer him the same
- And were Odenathus grown wild or tame,
- He got no more of her; for thus she'd say:
- "In wives it is but lechery and shame
- When, oftener, men with their bodies play.
-
- Two sons by this Odenathus had she,
- The which she bred in virtue and learning;
- But now again unto our tale turn we.
- I say, so worshipful a young being,
- Wise, and right generous in everything,
- Careful in war and courteous as well,
- And hardy in the field, and full daring,
- Was not in all the world where men do dwell.
-
- Her rich array may not be rightly told,
- Either of vessels or of fine clothing;
- She was clad all in jewels and in gold;
- And she did never cease, despite hunting,
- To gain of divers tongues a full knowing,
- Whenever she had time; she did intend
- To learn from books, which were to her liking,
- How she in virtue might her whole life spend.
-
- And briefly of this story now to treat,
- So doughty was her husband, as was she,
- That they two conquered many kingdoms great
- Throughout the East, with many a fair city
- That did pertain unto the majesty
- Of Rome; and with strong hands they held them fast;
- Nor might a foe escape by trying to flee
- The while Odenathus' good days did last.
-
- Her battles all (as whoso wills may read)
- Against Sapor the king and others too,
- And all her story as it fell, indeed,
- Why she was victor and had right thereto,
- And, after, all her misfortune and woe,
- How they besieged her and at last did take,
- Let him unto my master Petrarch go,
- Who wrote the whole of this, I undertake.
-
- Now when Odenathus was dead, then she
- The kingdom held within her own strong hand;
- Against her foes she fought so bitterly
- There was no king or prince in all that land
- But was right glad, if mercy make her bland,
- That she turned not against him her array;
- With her they made alliance, bond and band,
- To keep the peace and let her ride and play.
-
- The emperor of Rome, on Claudius
- (His predecessor, Galien too, that man),
- Had never courage to oppose her thus;
- Nor was Egyptian nor Armenian,
- Nor Syrian, nor yet Arabian
- That dared against her in the field to fight,
- For fear that at her hands they might be slain,
- Or by her army put to sudden flight.
-
- In kingly habit went her sons also,
- As being heirs to their sire's kingdoms all,
- Athenodorus and Thymalao
- Their names were (or the Greeks did so them call).
- But Fortune's honey is aye mixed with gall;
- This mighty queen could no great while endure.
- And Fortune from her high throne made her fall
- To wretchedness and into ways obscure.
-
- Aurelian, when Roman governance
- Came to his two strong hands, made no delay,
- But swore that on this queen he'd wreak vengeance,
- And so with mighty legions took his way
- Against Zenobia; let me briefly say
- He made her flee; and at the last he sent
- And fettered her and her two sons one day,
- And won the land, and home to Rome he went.
-
- Among the other booty Asian
- Her chariot was, of gold and jewellery,
- And this great Roman, this Aurelian,
- He carried it away for men to see.
- Before his car in triumph then walked she
- With golden chains upon her neck hanging;
- Crowned was she, too, to show her high degree,
- And full of priceless gems was her clothing.
-
- Alas, Fortune! She that but lately was
- The scourge of kings and emperors and powers,
- Now may the rabble gape at her, alas!
- And she that, armed, rode where grim battle lowers
- And took by force great cities and strong towers,
- Must wear a cap now while her two eyes weep;
- And she that bore the sceptre of carved flowers
- May bear a distaff and thus earn her keep.
- PEDRO, KING OF SPAIN
-
- O noble Pedro, glory once of Spain,
- Whom Fortune held so high in majesty,
- Well ought men read thy piteous death with pain!
- Out of thy land thy brother made thee flee;
- And later, at a siege, by scheme crafty,
- Thou wert betrayed, and led into his tent,
- Where he then, and with his own hand, slew thee,
- Succeeding to thy realm and government.
-
- The field of snow, with eagle black therein,
- Caught by the lime-rod, coloured as the gleed,
- He brewed this wickedness and all this sin.
- The "Wicked Nest" was worker of this deed;
- Not that Charles Oliver who aye took heed
- Of truth and honour, but the Armorican
- Ganelon Oliver, corrupt for mead,
- Brought low this worthy king by such a plan.
- PETER, KING OF CYPRUS
-
- O noble Peter, Cyprus' lord and king,
- Which Alexander won by mastery,
- To many a heathen ruin did'st thou bring;
- For this thy lords had so much jealousy,
- That, for no crime save thy high chivalry,
- All in thy bed they slew thee on a morrow.
- And thus does Fortune's wheel turn treacherously
- And out of happiness bring men to sorrow.
- BERNABO OF LOMBARDY
-
- Of Milan, great Bernabo Visconti,
- God of delight and scourge of Lombardy,
- Why should I tell not of thy misery,
- Since in all power thou did'st climb so high?
- Thy brother's son, and doubly thine ally,
- For he thy nephew was and son-in-law,
- Within his prison shut thee up to die,
- But I know not how death to thee did draw.
- UGOLINO, COUNT OF PISA
-
- Of Ugolino, Count of Pisa's woe
- No tongue can tell the half for hot pity.
- Near Pisa stands a tower, and it was so
- That to be there imprisoned doomed was he,
- While with him were his little children three,
- The eldest child was scarce five years of age.
- Alas, Fortune! It was great cruelty
- To lock such birds into such a cage!
-
- Condemned was he to die in that prison,
- Since Ruggieri, Pisa's bishop, twice
- Had lied, intrigued, and egged old passions on,
- Whereby the people did against him rise,
- And thrust him into prison in such wise
- As you have heard; and meat and drink he had
- So little that it could not long suffice,
- And was, moreover, very poor and bad.
-
- And on a day befell it, at the hour
- When commonly to him his food was brought,
- The gaoler shut the great doors of the tower.
- He heard it well enough, but he said naught,
- And to his heart anon there came the thought
- That they by hunger would leave him to die.
- "Alas," said he, "that ever I was wrought!"
- And thereupon the tears fell from his eye.
-
- His youngest son, who three years was of age,
- Unto him said: "Father, why do you weep?
- When will the gaoler bring us out pottage?
- Is there no crumb of bread that you did keep?
- I am so hungry that I cannot sleep.
- Now would God that I might sleep on for aye!
- Then should not hunger through my belly creep;
- For nothing more than bread I'd rather pray."
-
- Thus, day by day, this little child did cry,
- Till on his father's breast at length he lay
- And said: "Farewell, my father, I must die."
- And kissed the man and died that very day.
- And when the father saw it dead, I say,
- For grief his arms gnawed he until blood came,
- And said: "Alas, Fortune and welaway,
- It is thy treacherous wheel that I must blame!"
-
- His children thought that it for hunger was
- He gnawed his arms, and not that 'twas for woe,
- And cried: "O father, do not thus, alas!
- But rather eat our young flesh, even so;
- This flesh you gave us; take it back and go
- And eat enough!" 'Twas thus those children cried,
- And after that, within a day or two,
- They laid themselves upon his knees and died.
-
- Himself, despairing, all by hunger starved,
- Thus ended this great count of Pisa's cries;
- All his vast riches Fortune from him carved.
- Of his fate tragic let thus much suffice.
- Whoso would hear it told in longer wise,
- Let him read the great bard of Italy
- Whom men call Dante; seen through Dante's eyes
- No point is slurred, nor in one word fails he.
- NERO
- NERO
-
- Though viciousness had Nero in overplus,
- As ever fiend that's low in torment thrown.
- Yet he, as tells us old Suetonius,
- This whole wide world held subject; aye, did own,
- East, west, south, north, wherever Rome was known.
- Of rubies, sapphires, and of great pearls white
- Were all his garments broidered up and down,
- For he in jewels greatly did delight.
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- More delicate, more pompous of array,
- More proud was never emperor than he;
- That toga which he wore on any day,
- After that time he nevermore would see.
- Nets of gold thread he had in great plenty
- To fish in Tiber when he pleased to play.
- His lusts were all the laws in his decree,
- For Fortune was his friend and would obey.
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- He burned Rome for his delicate profligacy;
- Some senators he slew upon a day
- Only to learn how men might weep and cry;
- He killed his brother and with his sister lay.
- His mother put he into piteous way,
- For he her belly ripped up just to see
- Where he had been conceived; alack-a-day,
- That but so little for her life cared he!
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- No tear out of his two eyes for that sight
- Came, but he said: "A woman fair was she."
- Great wonder is it how he could or might
- Pass judgment thus upon her dead beauty.
- Wine to be brought him then commanded he
- And drank anon; no other sign he made.
- When might is wedded unto cruelty,
- Alas, too deep its venom will pervade!
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- A master had, in youth, this emperor,
- To teach him letters and all courtesy,
- For of morality he was the flower
- In his own time, unless the old books lie;
- And while this master held his mastery,
- So well he taught him wiles and subtle ways
- That ere could tempt him vice or tyranny
- Was, it is said, the length of many days.
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- This Seneca, of whom I do apprise,
- By reason Nero held him in such dread,
- Since he for vices spared not to chastise,
- Discreetly, though, by word and not by deed-
- "Sir," would he say, "an emperor must need
- Be virtuous and hate all tyranny"-
- For which, in bath, did Nero make him bleed
- From both his arms until he had to die.
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- This Nero had, though, out of arrogance,
- Been wont, in youth, against the rod to rise,
- Which afterward he thought a great grievance;
- Wherefore he made him perish in this wise.
- Nevertheless, this Seneca the wise
- Chose in a bath to die, as you did hear,
- Rather than suffer in some other guise;
- And thus did Nero slay his master dear.
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- Now it befell that Fortune cared no longer
- To Nero's high pride to be accomplice;
- For though he might be strong, yet she was stronger;
- She thought thus: "By God, I am none too nice,
- Setting a man who is but filled with vice
- In high degree, emperor over all.
- By God, up from his seat I will him trice;
- When he least thinks of it, then shall he fall."
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- The people rose against him, on a night,
- For all his faults; and when he it espied,
- Out of the doors he went and took to flight
- Alone; and where he thought he was allied
- He knocked; but always, and the more he cried
- The faster did they bar the doors, aye all;
- Then learned he well he'd been his own worst guide,
- And went his way, nor longer dared to call.
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- The people cried and rumbled up and down,
- And, having ears, he heard the thing they said:
- "Where's this false tyrant Nero, where's he flown?"
- For fear almost out of his wits he strayed,
- And to his gods, then, piously he prayed
- For succour, but no help might him betide.
- For fear of this he wished himself unmade,
- And ran into a garden, there to hide.
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- And in this garden were two fellows, yea,
- Who sat before a great fire and a red,
- And to those fellows he began to pray
- That they would slay him and strike off his head,
- But of his body, after he was dead,
- They should do nothing to its further shame.
- Himself he slew, no better counsel sped,
- Whereat Dame Fortune laughed and made a game.
- HOLOFERNES
- HOLOFERNES
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- Was never captain, no, of any king's
- That had more kingdoms in subjection thrown,
- Nor stronger was, in field; above all things,
- Nor in his time a greater of renown,
- Nor had more pomp with high presumption shown,
- Than Holofernes, whom Dame Fortune kissed
- Right lecherously, and led him up and down
- Until his head was off before 'twas missed.
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- Not only did this world hold him in awe
- For taking all its wealth and liberty,
- But he made every man renounce old law.
- "Nebuchadnezzar is your god," said he,
- "And now no other god shall worshipped be."
- Against his order no man dared to stand,
- Save in Bethulia, a strong city,
- Where Eliachim priest was of the land.
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- But from the death of Holofernes learn.
- Amidst his host he lay drunk, on a night,
- Within his tent, as large as ever barn,
- And yet, for all his pomp and all his might,
- Judith, a woman, as he lay upright,
- Sleeping, smote off his head and from his tent
- Stole secretly away from every wight,
- And with the head to her own town she went.
- ANTIOCHUS EPIPHANES
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- What needs it, as for King Antiochus,
- To tell his high and royal majesty,
- His great pride and his deeds so venomous?
- There never was another such as he.
- Go read what's said of him in Maccabee,
- And all the haughty sayings that he said,
- And how he fell from high prosperity,
- And on a hill how wretchedly lay dead.
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- Fortune had so enhanced the man's great pride
- That verily he thought he might attain
- Unto the utter stars on every side,
- And in a balance weigh the high mountain,
- And all the flood-tides of the sea restrain.
- And God's own people held he most in hate.
- Them would he slay with torment and with pain,
- Thinking that God his pride would not abate.
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- And because Nicanor and Timothy
- Were vanquished by the Jews so mightily,
- Unto all Jews so great a hate had he
- That he bade bring his chariot hastily,
- And swore an oath and said, impiteously,
- That to Jerusalem he'd go ere noon
- To wreak his ire on it full cruelly;
- But from his purpose he was turned, and soon.
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- God, for this menace, smote him then full sore
- With wound invisible, incurable,
- For in his guts he was so carved, aye more,
- The pain of it was insupportable.
- And certainly the thing was reasonable,
- For many a man's guts he had caused to pain;
- But from his purpose, cursed, damnable,
- In spite of all he would not him restrain.
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- He gave command to marshal his great host,
- And suddenly, or ere he was aware,
- God daunted all his pride and all his boast.
- For he so heavily fell from his car
- That from his very bones the flesh did tear,
- So that he might not either walk or ride,
- But in a litter men were forced to bear
- Him with them, bruised upon the back and side.
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- The wrath of God smote him so cruelly
- That through his body loathsome maggots crept;
- And therewithal he stank so horribly
- That none of those that round his person kept,
- Whether he lay awake or whether slept,
- Could, for the very stench of him, endure.
- In this foul state he wailed and howled and wept;
- That God was Lord of all he then was sure.
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- To all his host and to himself also
- Full loathsome was his carrion, one great blain;
- There were no men could bear him to and fro.
- And in this stink and in this horrid pain
- He died full wretchedly on a mountain.
- Thus had this robber and this homicide,
- Who made so many men weep and complain,
- Such guerdon as belongs to too great pride.
- ALEXANDER
- ALEXANDER
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- Alexander's tale is so well known a tune
- That everyone who is not simple grown
- Has heard somewhat, or all, of his fortune
- This whole wide world, to state conclusion known,
- He won by strength, or else for his renown
- Right gladly men to sue for peace did send.
- The pride of man and beast he tumbled down
- Where'er he went, and that was the world's end.
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- Comparison might never yet be staked
- Upon a single similar conquering power;
- For all this world in dread of him has quaked.
- He was of knighthood and of freedom flower;
- Fortune made him her heir to honour's bower;
- Save wine and women, nothing might assuage
- His high intent in arms; all men must cower,
- So filled he was of leonine courage.
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- What praise were it to him, though 'gain were told
- Darius' tale or of others brought low-
- Of kings and dukes and earls and princes bold,
- The which he conquered and brought down to woe?
- I say, as far as man may ride or go
- The world was his, to tell it in a trice.
- For though I wrote or told you always, so,
- Of his knighthood, the time would not suffice.
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- Twelve years he reigned, as tells us Maccabee;
- And Philip's son of Macedon he was,
- Who first was king of Greece, the whole country.
- O noble Alexander, O alas!
- That ever you should come to such a pass!
- For poisoned by your very own you were;
- Your six did Fortune turn into an ace,
- And yet for you she never wept a tear!
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- Who shall give me the tears now to complain
- For death of gentle blood and high franchise?
- He all the world did wield as one domain,
- And yet he thought it could not long suffice,
- So full his heart was of high enterprise.
- Alas! And who shall help me to indict
- False Fortune, and all poison to despise?
- For these I blame for all the woe I write.
- JULIUS CAESAR
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- By wisdom, manhood, and by great labour,
- From humble bed to royal majesty
- Up rose he, Julius the conqueror,
- Who won the Occident by land and sea,
- By force of arms, or else by clear treaty,
- And unto Rome made all this tributary;
- And then of Rome the emperor was he,
- Till Fortune came to be his adversary.
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- O mighty Caesar, who in Thessaly
- Against great Pompey, father of yours in law,
- That of the East had all the chivalry
- From farthest places that the sun e'er saw,
- You, by your knighthood broke them for death's maw,
- Save those few men who thence with Pompey fled,
- Whereby you put the Orient in awe.
- Thank Fortune now that you so well have sped.
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- But now a little while I will bewail
- This Pompey, this so noble governor
- Of Rome, who fled when battle's chance did fail;
- I say, one of his men, a false traitor,
- Smote off his head to win himself favour
- With Julius, and there the head he brought.
- Alas, Pompey! Of Orient conqueror,
- That Fortune such an end for thee hath wrought!
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- To Rome again repaired great Julius,
- To have his triumph, laureate full high;
- But on a time Brutus and Cassius,
- Who ever had of great estate envy,
- Full secretly did lay conspiracy
- Against this Julius, in subtle wise,
- And fixed the place at which he soon should die
- By dagger thrusts, as I shall you apprise.
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- This Julius, to the Capitol he went
- Upon a day, as he'd been wont to go,
- And there they seized on him, as well they meant,
- This treacherous Brutus and each other foe,
- And struck him with their daggers, high and low,
- And gave him many a wound and let him die;
- But never groaned he, save at one stroke, no
- (Or two perchance), unless his legend lie.
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- So manly was this Julius in his heart,
- And so well loved he stately decency,
- That, though his deadly wounds did burn and smart,
- His mantle yet about his hips cast he,
- That no man there should see his privity.
- And as he lay there, dying, in a trance,
- And knew that he was dying, verily,
- Of decency yet had he remembrance.
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- Lucan to tell this story I commend,
- Suetonius too, Valerius also,
- Who of the tale have written to the end
- And told how, of these mighty conquerors two,
- Fortune was first the friend and then the foe.
- No man may trust in Fortune's favour long,
- But as one fearing ambush must he go.
- Witness the end of all these conquerors strong.
- CROESUS
- CROESUS
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- The wealthy Croesus, Lydia's sometime king,
- Of which Croesus King Cyrus had such dread,
- Yet was he taken, in his pride swelling,
- And to be burned upon a pyre was led.
- But such a rain down from the clouds was shed
- As quenched the fire and let him there escape;
- But to be warned, no grace was in him spread
- Till Fortune on the gallows made him gape.
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- When he'd escaped, not changed was his intent
- To march at once into new wars again.
- He thought right well 'twas Fortune that had sent
- Such chance that he'd escape because of rain,
- And that by foes he never should be slain;
- And then a vision in the night he met,
- At which he waxed so proud and grew so fain
- That upon vengeance all his heart was set.
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- Upon a tree he was, or so he thought,
- Where Jupiter did wash him, back and side,
- And Phoebus, then, a fair white towel brought
- To dry him with and thereby swell his pride;
- And to his daughter, who stood there beside,
- And well, he knew, in knowledge did abound,
- He bade interpret what it signified,
- And she his dream in this wise did expound.
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- "The tree," she said, "the gallows is to mean,
- And Jupiter betokens snow and rain,
- While Phoebus with his towel white and clean,
- That is the sunbeams beating down amain;
- You shall be hanged, O father, 'tis certain;
- The rain shall wash you and the sun shall dry."
- And thus she gave him warning flat and plain,
- His daughter, who was Phania, say I.
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- So hanged was Croesus, that proud Lydian king,
- His royal throne could nothing then avail.
- Tragedy is no other kind of thing;
- Nor can the singer cry aught, or bewail,
- But that Dame Fortune always will assail
- With unwarned stroke those great ones who are proud;
- For when men trust her most, then will she fail
- And cover her bright face as with a cloud.
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- Explicit tragedia
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- HERE THE KNIGHT HALTED THE MONK IN HIS TALE
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